Premiums likely to rise as insurers forced to pay up for massive storms

TORONTO – Home owners should prepare to pay more for property insurance as the severe weather trend that has battered the country during the past year is expected to continue.

“There are more and more storms happening, and we’re seeing extreme weather events that happened once every 40 years… that can now be expected to happen once every six years,” said Pete Karageorgos, manager of consumer and industry relations at the Insurance Bureau of Canada.

“Trends for the last few years have been that we’re seeing storms occur with greater regularity so the amount of claims that have been presented have been averaging about a billion dollars a year over the last three years or so.”

While the industry group doesn’t comment on specific premiums, Karageorgos said costs will drive prices in the insurance industry.

“When your costs go up, the prices are going to follow. It’s like that for a cup of coffee and insurance is the same,” he said.

Intact Financial Corp. (TSX:IFC), one of Canada’s largest property and casualty insurers, raised premiums by 15 to 20 per cent during the past few months as catastrophic losses and weather-related claims have risen.

The company has also introduced peril-based pricing and changes in the products, and is increasing its push to educate customers on how to limit the impact of storms. Deductibles have also been increased in most provinces, with a base deductible of $1,000 instead of $500.

“From water to wind, the impacts of climate change coupled with urban growth, aging municipal infrastructure and the greater prevalence of finished basements are posing new challenges to the industry,” said Intact spokesman Gilles Gratton.

“The insurance product must evolve and adapt to reflect emerging climate change risks and ensure the home insurance product is sustainable, to ensure its availability and affordability across the country for the long term.”

Catastrophic losses insured by Intact over the last three years represented between 10 per cent and 20 per cent of Intact’s total claims costs in personal property, Gratton added, noting that water damage, wind and hail claims now represent more than 50 per cent of the company’s insured losses in personal property.

According to the Insurance Bureau of Canada, the amount of insured damage resulting from extreme weather in Canada grew from less of $200 million in 2006 to $1.2 billion in 2012.

In the past year, the combination of massive flooding in Alberta in June and a one-day torrential rainfall in Toronto in July brought the overall amount of insured property damages across Canada to $3 billion.

The ice storm that crippled Toronto and other parts of Ontario, Quebec and the Atlantic provinces over the Christmas holiday left thousands of people without electricity for days. Frigid temperatures from a system dubbed a”‘polar vortex” suspended and delayed flights earlier this week in Toronto, Montreal and Ottawa.

It’s still too early to say how much the deep freeze will cost, but Glenn McGillivray, managing director of the Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction, said the latest storms are part of an ongoing pattern that should alert homeowners.

“It’s just been five horrendous years in a row,” McGillivray said.

“We think this is the way it’s going to be going forward. It doesn’t mean we’re going to have really bad years every year, but it does mean that they’re no longer going to be rare.”

Premiums likely to rise as insurers forced to pay up for massive storms

Oh the insurers aren’t just going after Toronto. They are going after people in Calgary who weren’t even flooded. They are doubling our premiums and decreasing our coverage, even trying to remove parts of it.

Alberta 2013 flood – Insured property damage = $1.7 billion
Toronto 2013 flood – Insured property damage = $850 million
Ontario 1998 ice storm – insured property damage = $1.57 billion (in 1998 dollars)
Response of insurer in Calgary in Jan, 2014 for someone who had NO damage whatever either insured or not = double yearly premiums; lower maximum of amount eligible for collection on sewage backup from $55K to 15K; attempt to de-insure roof for hail and ice damage due to age of roof (roof was replaced in 2011).
The complete bill for damage from the Alberta floods in 2013 is $5 billion. Most water damage was due to overland water and was not insured. Taxpayers paid for the greatest majority of the damage and there are countless stories of problems people had trying to collect on insurance due to sewer backup.

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